Route of proposed Nicaraguan canal unveiled

Jul. 7, 2014
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A handout photograph provided by the Presidency of Nicaragua shows Chinese entrepreneur Wang Jing (left), head of HKND Group, which is licensed for the canal construction, as he is received by Laureano Ortega Murillo, director of the Official Agency of Investment and Exportations Promotion in Nicaragua at International Airport Augusto C. Sandino in Managua, Nicaragua, on July 6. / César Pérez /Presidency of Nicaragua/EPA

by USA TODAY

by USA TODAY

MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) - Nicaragua's government and Hong Kong-based HKND Group on Monday unveiled the route of a proposed $40 billion inter-ocean canal to compete with the Panama Canal that Sandinista officials hope will lift the Central American country out of poverty.

While the canal has the support of President Daniel Ortega and most Nicaraguans, many legal experts charge that the deal violates the country's national sovereignty. Environmental experts warn that construction could cause profound ecological damage by damming rivers, splitting ecosystems and moving untold tons of earth. Others fear the project is not economically feasible.

Representatives of HKND, which is owned by Chinese businessman Wang Jing, said Monday that the canal will stretch 173 miles (278 kilometers), 65 miles (105 kilometers) of which are across Lake Nicaragua.

Junsong Dong, chief of engineers for HKND, said that after studying six possible routes for the mega-project they decided one that starts on the Pacific Ocean at the mouth of river Brito, heads south through the city of Rivas and crosses Lake Nicaragua. From Lake Nicaragua, it goes by the Tule and Punta Gordas rivers until it reaches the southern Caribbean by Bluefields Bay.

The engineer said the canal project will employ about 50,000 people directly and indirectly benefit another 200,000.

"This project is going to be the biggest built in the history of humanity. It will be an enormous help to the Nicaraguan people and for the world in general, because world trade will require it, we are sure of this," Wang told students at the Managua University of Engineering.

Junsong Dong said the canal project consists of six sub-projects, including the channel itself, construction of two deep-water ports, a free-trade area, tourism projects in San Lorenzo and an airport in the city of Rivas.

Construction is expected to begin in December 2014 and take five years

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